Trump impeachment hearing spurs shadow spin war

Ranking member Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., and Steve Castor, Republican staff legal counsel of the House Oversight Committee, talk during testimony of top U.S. diplomat in Ukraine William Taylor, and career Foreign Service officer George Kent, before the House Intelligence Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2019, during the first public impeachment hearing of President Donald Trump's efforts to tie U.S. aid for Ukraine to investigations of his political opponents. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Moments before House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff could welcome witnesses to the first public hearing of the impeachment inquiry, President Donald Trump took to Twitter to dismiss the “New Hoax. Same Swamp.”

Former Obama administration aides-turned-podcasters dissected the hearings in real time. They broadcast their running conversation on Slack, an instant messaging platform popular in workplaces, over YouTube to thousands of left-leaning followers.

And partisans on both sides of the aisle used Twitter to debate the significance of a revelation by William Taylor, the top diplomat in Ukraine, that one of his staff members overheard a telephone conversation in which Trump discussed “the investigations.”

So went the national conversation surrounding the first presidential impeachment hearings of the hyperpartisan, social media era.

It is a moment when influence and misinformation efforts move at lightning speed and with a sophistication that would have been unimaginable when the nation last went through a presidential impeachment more than 20 years ago, an era when dialup modems and AOL message boards powered the digital town square.

“For as much time as the Democrats have spent trying to orchestrate “political theater” they have done a terrible job,” presidential son Eric Trump declared on Twitter. “This clown show is horribly boring. There is not a single person outside the beltway who is engaged in this nonsense. Can’t wait to win again in 2020! #DCSucks.”

Tommy Vietor, a former Obama White House spokesman and co-host of Pod Save America, applauded Schiff for keeping early questioning focused on Taylor’s revelation that a staff member overheard a telephone conversation between Trump and Gordon Sondland, an ambassador to the European Union, that he found concerning.

Taylor said the staffer asked Sondland what President Trump thought about Ukraine. Sondland responded that Trump cared more about investigating Biden.

“Really smart of Schiff to start with the new revelations, get Taylor to repeat it,” Vietor wrote in a real-time Slack commentary posted on YouTube. “Create more snippets to share.”

Some on the left pushed #TrumpBribery, a hashtag used nearly 50,000 times before the hearings even kicked off. Democrats, who have at times struggled to craft an easily explained narrative around Trump’s conduct with Ukraine, celebrated its success.

“BOOM: #TrumpBribery is trending nationally and has already been tweeted over 10,000 times. Let’s keep it going!” Scott Dworkin, co-founder of the Democratic Coalition Against Trump, cheered on Twitter.

Before the day’s witnesses could deliver their opening statements, Republicans questioned Schiff’s fairness and created a moment that supporters could share on social media at the top of the hearing.

Rep. Jim Jordan, an Ohio Republican, pointedly asked Schiff when he would allow members of the intelligence committee to question the whistleblower whose complaint spurred the impeachment inquiry. The whistleblower had raised concerns that Trump inappropriately pressured Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden’s business dealings in the Ukraine.

“Of the 435 members of Congress, you are the only member who knows who that individual is,” Jordan told Schiff. “And your staff is the only staff of any member of Congress that has had a chance to talk to that individual. We would like that opportunity. When might that happen in this proceeding today?”

The whistleblower contacted Schiff’s staff before filing the complaint with the inspector general’s office. But attorneys for the whistleblower said their client never met with Schiff.

“First, as the gentleman knows, that’s a false statement,” said Schiff, whose response was met with laughter by some in the Capitol Hill hearing room. “I do not know the identity of the whistleblower, and I’m determined to make sure that the identity is protected.”

The Republican National Committee posted video on Twitter of Jordan pressing Schiff but did not include the California lawmaker’s response. The clip was shared from the RNC account more than 1,300 times.

Even the sartorial choices of witness George Kent, a deputy secretary of state who wore a patterned green bow tie and matching pocket square, spurred partisan debate on Twitter.

“Imagine being George Kent and deciding to wear a bow tie to go up against Donald Trump,” tweeted One America News Network host Jack Posobiec, a self-described nationalist-conservative.

The liberal commentator John Nichols was more appreciative of Kent’s neckwear.

“Well, yes, it’s obvious by now that George Kent’s superpowers are associated with the bow tie,” Nichols wrote.

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Seitz reported from Chicago.

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